Last June, when it looked like the world would never open up, I told myself it was time to take my acoustic guitar down from its mount on the living room wall and start playing again. The shutdown was the perfect time to implement a daily practice schedule and get my callouses built up. Unfortunately, I was too distracted and disgruntled to do something as joyful and organized as playing music. I couldn’t face it. I wasn’t in the mood. All I seemed to accomplish was loads of eating and drinking.
When I started working with Amy the life coach three years ago, she had me fill out a bunch of questionnaires about the kind of activities that brought me happiness. What did I dream of doing one day? One of those activities was writing (check!) and another was to start playing my guitar again. “But it’s too exhausting, Amy,” I whined. “I haven’t picked up my guitar in years and I’m so rusty. I have too much work to do to get back up to speed. And I wasn’t that good in the first place. Plus, I can’t sing.”
“See what you’re doing?” she said. “You’re future pacing yourself for failure. You’re already deciding why it’s not gonna work before you try it. So you’re stopping yourself from having any joy or creativity. You’re cutting off a beautiful part of who you are.” And still, I hesitated.
Then in the fall, my friend, Ted was given a guitar by his pal, Philip and encouraged to learn how to play. “I have mysteriously fat fingers,” Ted told me. Hard to believe because the rest of him is so skinny. “Honestly, the only sounds I seem to be able to make is toinking – tionk, ploink, thryp, plonk. Philip says I must be trying to get worse.”
“Being proficient at the guitar is deceptively difficult. Someone said, ‘Learning the guitar is easy. Mastering it is difficult.” I said.
“Yeah, well I ain’t mastering nothing, Sister,” he said. “But I should be past ploinking by now. I feel like I should be able to make a sound that doesn’t make you wince.”
“It takes time. Be patient,” I said.
“When Philip asked if I was practicing, I said yes. He said I must be lying because there’s no way I could be this bad if I was actually practicing.”
“Philip is a mean teacher. You can’t expect yourself to be good after a few weeks. You have to practice for years to get good at it. Don’t give up.”
I heard my voice echoing in my ears. I sat down at the cabinet in the living room and began pulling out all the sheet music, books and notebooks that had been stuffed in there gathering dust. I used the opportunity to purge some of the stuff we didn’t need any more and started organizing the rest, trying to find the chords and lyrics to the songs I had played and sung for decades.
“Don’t throw away any of your songs!” Nick said. Of course I wouldn’t. Before I learned to play the guitar, I put my thoughts and dreams and fears down in what I thought of as poetry, filling notebook after notebook. After I learned the guitar, I could put a mood in music to my words. I could express myself in song. I wrote songs all through my teen years, into college and through my relationship with Nick. They formed a record of my emotional life.
I learned to play guitar in the eight grade. The summer of 1974, I was thirteen and did a lot of babysitting for two sweet blonde kids while their Mom went out at night to play music gigs at parties and bars. Donna was my idol. She was twenty four years old, pretty and cool and a rock star to boot. She fronted the band and her brothers backed her up, playing The Doobie Brothers, The Allman Brothers, the Eagles, Jackson Browne and best of all, Linda Rondstat. I thought she sounded just like Linda. She offered to teach me some of her songs on the guitar if I could get my hands on one, so Grandmom bought me an inexpensive Yamaha. Donna taught me some basic chords and simple folk songs and I saved my pennies to buy a Beatles’ song book. I did my best to copy songs I heard on the radio, Dolly Parton, John Denver, Cat Stevens.
Looking through the stacks of disorganized sheet music and song books, I found notebooks full of yellowed lined paper, scraps of menus and cardboard backs of spiral notebooks covered with chords and scribbled lyrics:
I find my teenage self, my 24-year-old self in song after song about love and doubt and fear and breaking up and getting together and not being able to live without and trying to live without and wanting to not hurt, wanting to love, trying to love, not knowing how to love…
I played the same twenty songs I learned in middle school. I strummed D, A, G, E, C, F, Am, Em. I wrote songs. I hid them away. Then I grew up.
When Chloe was little, I decided to take official guitar lessons. Nick bought me a beautiful Alvarez with deep mellow bass notes and mother of pearl inlays. I hired an adorable teacher named Mac who taught me fingering exercises, picking techniques, how to read guitar tablature. He instructed me on how to practice, how to relax, how to have more fun. He had me make a list of songs I could play from memory around the fire at a party. He tried to get me to play the blues. I just wanted him to show me how to play songs I wanted to sing.
“Girls don’t play the blues,” I informed him.
“What about Bonnie Raitt?” he said.
“Okay, well, her. Just show me how to do Dear Prudence.”
Writing this is making me realize that my relationship with my guitar is weighted. Picking up my guitar again is like picking up my past. There’s a little sadness, because what happened to all that passion? All that longing? All that life inside of me? There are so many reminders of growing up, not only in my own songs, but in the songs I longed to learn how to play in order to express my feelings. There’s proof in my lyrics of the ways I ran love off. Or tried to run love off.
There’s regret because I didn’t believe in myself more. And that’s when I circle back to Amy’s comment and see how my reluctance to pick up my guitar and sing with abandon is just another facet of the perfectionism I’ve been battling for decades. I allowed perfectionism to stop me in so many ways. I shut down parts of myself that didn’t meet my own standards, heading off any criticism I might have to endure. The harshest criticism came from inside my own head. The real question is will I allow it to stop me now?
Ted’s courage gave me courage. If he could tolerate sucking so bad, then so could I. It inspired me to pull my guitar down off the wall and strum a few bars. I tried to do some Travis picking on a Nancy Griffith song and I was rusty! But I was also aware that it was something I could reclaim with some dedication.
I also have a little incentive these days to get my fingers in shape. The Official 2021 College Roommates Sixtieth Birthday Bash is happening at the house in North Carolina in May. Nance, Deb, Beth and I swore that we would make up for not seeing one another in 2020 by committing to a week together, just the four of us, and we are making it happen! Our activities will include mostly talking combined with laughing, drinking, cooking, hiking and our favorite activity of all, singing! Beth is our leader of song. She will bring her guitar and play all of our favorites, the songs we have been singing together for forty years. Deb will add her gorgeous harmonies and Nance and I will choreograph interpretive dances. But I thought I might take some responsibility this year and learn a few new songs to take the lead on so Beth and I could play together. Two guitars never hurt.
When Ted describes how long it takes for his fingers to transition from a D chord to an A, I remember those days vividly. I remember ploinking and thwyping and thinking I would never be able to play a simple song. Then, after years of practice, I could. Pretty soon, Ted will be sitting around a campfire with Philip and his other pals, playing First Kiss. I will be playing long-lost favorites from our college years with Beth and Deb and Nance, singing for all I’m worth. And we will both be able to tell Amy that we didn’t cut ourselves off from creativity and joy.
YES! JOY LIVES HERE!
This makes me very, very sad.
WOW I love that you’re doing this!
Love the pictures and this blog mucho.
How wonderful you’re getting together with ol’ friends that can bring out the music
in you. It never leaves us. The fingers will come back one note at a time. “-)
Makes me want to sneak up to the cabin and listen to the music!!!
Since I can’t, play real loud so I can hear ya’ll here down in Charleston!
Love ya
So proud of you.
Thanks, Frankie! We need more music in our lives. One of my favorite nights was you at the piano at our house. Didn’t know you were talented at THAT too! We’ll play loud in NC and hope the sound carries.
I would love to play with you too! Maybe there will be another music party soon……
Yes! That needs to happen soon.
You’re the greatest person I’ve ever known.
Ha! Well, sorry I didn’t include that picture of you in this post. Next time!
I just love reading your blog Leslie! It has away of taking me back to some very long ago memories. My best friend and I use to visit other friends up by rough river and because the radio was broke in her truck we would sing all the way there.
“Those were the day days my friend”
I never learned guitar and have always said it’s on my bucket list!
Thank you for sharing your stories of life’s lessons while fulfilling another one of your dreams.
Love the picture! And have fun at your yearly reunion, maybe another story?!
Hi Kristina, Yes! Most definitely more stories from the reunion! I am counting down the days. I really encourage you to finally take those guitar lessons — they will bring back memories of singing in the truck with your friend on the way to rough river. It’s a way of keeping those memories alive. Thanks so much for reading and your wonderful story! 🙂
Oh, singing with friends is the best. Hit me up any time! My sister and I sing together on the phone, me here, her in Kentucky. I bet you’re a good song writer. Loved the picture of the rough draft. Anyway, your piece made me think of all the songs I loved from all the decades. In the songs from my youth, each particular song in my brain has the face of a boy attached to it, my crush at the time. Sometimes the face is from a picture in the yearbook. Ha ha ha. Thanks.
Rhoda, mine too! It was ALL about the boys. In fact, my high school best friend and I wrote a song that just consisted of names of all the boys we liked. Nothing else. She can still recite the list but neither of us can remember the tune. Fun times.